Just Sour Grapes From ‘Muppety Maoists’ Or a ‘Hostile Takeover By the International’?
By Joe Maniscalco
We now know that the head of the union representing more than 40,000 New York City Transit workers is officially out. Former TWU Local 100 President Richard Davis resigned under pressure last week, amidst ugly allegations of “inappropriate sexual behavior” and outrageous abuse of power.
But why just now, many rank and file members wonder—when these kinds of complaints have been swirling around for years?
Let’s Take Back Billions in 2025 to Advance the Wellbeing of All New Yorkers
By Ray Rogers
It’s Time to End New York's Multi-Billion-Dollar Stock Transfer Tax Rebate To Wealthy Wall Streeters
While infrastructures throughout New York State are crumbling and critical public services are grossly underfunded or non-existent, the message for years emanating from the offices of Gov. Kathy Hochul, Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie, and Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins is "now is not the right time." Well, maybe now is not the right time for them but most certainly it is the "right time" for millions of suffering New Yorkers.
Can New York City’s DOI Pierce the 9/11 WTC Coverup?
By Bob Hennelly
For years now, members of Congress and 9/11 WTC advocates have been rebuffed in their bid for the records maintained by the Giuliani and Bloomberg administrations about what they knew and when they knew it regarding the deadly air in lower Manhattan and western Brooklyn following the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.
Inside the Split Decision on NYC H+H Doctors’ Contract
By Steve Wishnia
Doctors at seven of New York City’s public hospitals have voted to ratify the tentative contract agreement reached Jan. 13, but physicians at three others voted to reject it, the Doctors Council SEIU announced Jan. 27.
Listen: Pushing Back Against Trumpian Assaults on Workers; Nurses Fight Union-Busting
By Bob Hennelly
Last Thursday, federal immigration officers executed a warrantless raid at an Ironbound business in Newark, New Jersey. Undocumented workers and American citizens—as well as a U.S. military veteran—were all swept up in the raid.
Union Representing NYC Transit Workers in Leadership Crisis
By Joe Maniscalco
“Out sick—or just “out” period?
TWU Local 100, the union representing New York City Transit workers, says embattled President Richard Davis is currently “out sick until further notice. But opponents of the recently re-elected union head contend he’s done and the International is taking over.
Listen: Trump 2.0 Fallout; MLK’s Ties to TWU Trade Unionists
By Bob Hennelly
On this Inauguration/MLK edition of Pacifica Radio’s We Decide: America at the Crossroads with Jenna Flanagan—our panel of commentators, including “Attitude with Arne Arnesen” host Arne Arnesen and Washington-based investigative reporter and editor Dave Levinthal take a look at what having Trump back in the White House means for the country.
NYC Doctors Urge ‘No’ Vote On Proposed Contract
By Steve Wishnia
Doctors in the New York City Health + Hospitals system reached what their union called a “groundbreaking new contract” agreement Jan. 13—but a group of members is urging a vote against ratifying the tentative deal, saying it doesn’t do enough to address the system’s “physician staffing crisis.”
United Healthcare’s ‘Sir Andy’ Lampooned on Wall Street!
By Bob Hennelly
This week, the big health care story was United Healthcare Group’s latest earnings report—the first since the murder of CEO Brian Thompson here in New York City on December.
Surviving Frank Rizzo’s Philadelphia
War Stories By Phil Cohen
In 1943, Frank Rizzo joined the Philadelphia Police Department, worked his way up through the ranks to captain, and was eventually appointed police commissioner in 1967. He not only supported, but encouraged police brutality, racism, and corruption throughout the department. Four years later, he was elected mayor.
Listen: Centerlight Bosses Cut Off Battling Nurses in New York
By Bob Hennelly
The death toll from the Los Angeles wildfires rose to 24 with another 16 people missing and the body count likely to rise. Over the weekend, firefighters made progress containing the Palisades and Eaton fires.
The New York City Council Doesn’t ‘Give a S#*t’ About Retirees!!
By Joe Maniscalco
A delegation of New York City Municipal retirees and supporters fighting back against ongoing efforts to push 250,000 former civil servants into a profit-driven Medicare Advantage health insurance plan emerged from a meeting with Council Member Erik Bottcher on Friday with arguably the most clear-eyed assessment of the ongoing crisis delivered thus far.
Medicare Advantage Peddlers Are Concerned About Retirees’ Anxiety!?!
By Joe Maniscalco
Whether you rightly want to it gall or chutzpah, the corporate profiteers peddling Medicare Advantage health insurance plans to retirees across the country have once again revealed just how craven and hollow inside they really are with their preposterous new ads promising recipients $900 grocery allowances.
Listen: NYS Ranks With Jim Crow South on Poverty
By Bob Hennelly
In this episode of WBAI-Pacifica’s “What’s Going On?” with Kezia Glow, we dive right into an urgent issue affecting millions of families across the nation: child poverty. It’s a post-pandemic reality Albany refuses to address in any truly transformative way.
Listen: The Pushback Against Mayor Eric Adams’ Attempts to go ‘Radio Silent’
By Bob Hennelly
On this episode of the Stuck Nation Labor Radio Hour, we dedicate the entire show to Mayor Eric Adams’ push to start encrypting NYPD radio traffic, which has up to now been accessible to both the public and the news media in real time.
Union-Busting Bosses Try to Pit Doctors Against Doctors in NYC; Adams Cries for Mediation
By Steve Wishnia
Doctors at four New York City public hospitals have set a strike deadline for Jan. 13—and one of the contractors that employs them is encouraging coworkers to cross picket lines if they walk out. Mayor Eric Adams, meanwhile, has asked the parties to go into mediation for 60 days.
Listen: Capitol Hill Fails WTC Survivors—Again!
By Bob Hennelly
On this episode of the Stuck Nation Labor Radio Hour, we talk with UFA President Ansbro about the last minute collapse of a bi-partisan bill to fully fund the 9/11 WTC Health Program, as well as the dangerous spike in FDNY EMS response times where shockingly only one-in-five heart attack victims in New York City survives.
Strike Looms as NYC Turns its Back on Doctors Working at Public Hospitals
By Steve Wishnia
Doctors at four of New York’s 11 public hospitals have overwhelmingly voted to authorize a strike after more than a year of futile contract talks.
The vote at Jacobi Medical Center and North Central Bronx Hospital in the Bronx, Queens Hospital Center, and South Brooklyn Health, announced Dec. 19, was 97% in favor of a possible walkout, the Doctors Council SEIU said. The union represents more than 2,500 doctors at the ten hospitals where New York City Health + Hospitals has contracts with affiliates to hire them.
The Hangers were the Last Straw…
By Ryn Gargulinski
The hangers on the floor were the last straw. The hangers had been accompanied by tissue paper squares and plastic bags on the floor, with more papers, bags, hangers and random shirts strewn across the front counter next to the register.
That’s what I walked into one morning at the shirt shop at my part-time gig – a colossal mess. My mind went into tantrum overdrive.
Listen: Who’s Caring for NYC Docs?/Gearing Up For Trump Deportation Battle…
By Bob Hennelly
On this episode of the Stuck Nation Labor Radio Hour, we hear from two New York City physicians with the Doctors Council, SEIU about the lack of progress with management at Health + Hospitals Corporation, the city’s public hospital system.